What was advertised in a revolutionary American newspaper 250 years ago today?
“The celebrated high bred Horse YOUNG FEARNOUGHT, WILL … cover Mares …”

With the arrival of spring in 1776, the final page of the April 6 edition of John Dixon and William Hunter’s Virginia Gazette looked as though it could have doubled as a catalog of stud horses.
- “KING HEROD STANDS here [at Rosegill], and will cover Mares …”
- “The noted swift Horse TRISTRAM SHANDY … will cover Mares …”
- “FEARNOUGHT STANDS at Hick’s Ford … to cover …”
- “The celebrated high bred Horse YOUNG FEARNOUGHT, WILL … cover Mares …”
- “The beautiful high blooded bay Horse LAUREL … will cover Mares …”
- “OSCAR, A BEAUTIFUL Sorrel … stands this Year to cover Mares …”
- “The beautiful high bred chestnut Horse DAMON … will cover Mares …”
- “CYPHAX … covers Mares …”
- “GODOLPHIN, A BEAUTIFUL bright Bay … to cover Mares …”
- “ROCKINGHAM, A FINE bay Horse … to cover Mares …”
- “The noted Horse OLD PARTNER … WILL cover Mares this Season …”
Some advertisers claimed that their horses already had such reputations that they needed to say little to promote them, though that did not stop them from making a pitch. Thomas Field, for instance, stated that the “number of Mares put to Godolphin, since he has been allowed to cover, has gained him such Reputation, as well for the Certainty of his getting Colts, as for their Size and Beauty, that a further Description of him is needless.” William Gay proclaimed that Young Fearnought’s “Figure, together with the Size and Form of his Colts, are such to render him, in the Esteem of the best Judges, deservedly one of the best covering Horses in America,” while also asserting that the “Pedigree of this Horse is so well known as to make a Description needless.” In contrast, others went into detail about pedigrees. According to Neill Buchanan, Jr., Oscar was “got by YOUNG SNIP, his Dam by Lord Morton’s ARABIAN, his Grandam by OLD CRAB, his Great Grandam by the BALD GALLOWAY, his Great Great Grandam by Darley’s ARABIAN, out of BAY BOLTON’s Dam.”
Advertisements placed for other purposes also appeared in the Virginia Gazette, yet notices for stud horses dominated that issue. They testified to the popularity of horse breeding among the colony’s gentry and the popularity of horse racing as a pastime in Virginia during the era of the American revolution.
**********
Advertisements in the New-York Gazette and Weekly Mercury that same week showed a similar enthusiasm for breeding horses. That newspaper also incorporated images.







































